National & InternationalTop StoriesNPR Topics: World NPR Topics: Nation Art & Culture NPR Topics: Business Metro & StateJohn ArchibaldLocal Government With Kyle Whitmire Conservation: The Behavior Gap Magic City Marketplace The Price of Poverty Price of Poverty: Time Banks Price of Poverty: Involuntary Flextime Price of Poverty: Buy-a-Meter Birmingham-Southern's Struggles: a Student Perspective Price of Poverty: Food Deserts Remembering Cecil Whitmire Occupational Tax Settlement Child Care Subsidies at Risk Robert Bentley Vestavia Hills: Library in the Forest Hotel Tax Dispute Oil Spill and Hair Sausages Anne Frank and Me Jefferson County Commission Runoff On the Line: Ask the Mayor Midwives in Alabama The Future of the Jefferson County Commission New EPA Sulfur Dioxide Rules Alabama Gubernatorial Primary 2010 Alabama and the Oil Spill: Seafood Safety Alabama and the Oil Spill: One Family's Story Bike to Work The ASO plays Carnegie Hall Alabama and the Oil Spill: Hurricane Season News Features Archive |
![]()
The mayor's office did not return repeated calls for an interview. Langford did tell the Birmingham News that he had no intention of fighting and that he was simply defending the city's reputation. One side note to this story. Hartley is active in Free the Hops, an organization pushing legislation to raise the state limit on alcohol content in beer. Last year, Free the Hops boycotted Birmingham Budweiser -- the distributor where Larry Langford is director of public relations. Hartley says that issue had nothing to do with his comments to the mayor. ~ Andrew Yeager, May 14, 2009. |


Birmingham--
Facebook, Twitter and blogs are abuzz today with news of a showdown between Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford and local tavern owner Jerry Hartley. Langford and Hartley verbally sparred at Wednesday's meeting of the Five Points South Merchants Association. Hartley tells WBHM's Andrew Yeager the confrontation erupted during a conversation about regional cooperation to address the problem of "brain drain."